Here Are All the Reasons You Need to Read Fat Chance, Charlie Vega
Fat Chance, Charlie Vega by Crystal Maldonado is like Nintendo's Kirby; it sucked me in and then blew me away. It captured me – heart, soul, body, mind, etc, etc – and no Jan, I will not be quiet about it. I JUST *clenches fist* REALLY NEED YOU TO READ THIS BOOK. And here are all the reasons why.
If Tokyo Ever After by Emiko Jean Isn’t on Your TBR, You Need to Fix That Right Now
What’s high school without a personal meeting with the Emperor of Japan, a grumpy bodyguard with it-should-be-illegal good looks, and a major media scandal plastered across all the tabloids? Oh, was that not everyone’s experience? Well, it was for Izumi Tanaka – just your average ordinary everyday superhero teenage girl turned Imperial Princess (and yes, that was a horribly outdated Smash Mouth reference). If you don't already have Tokyo Ever After by Emiko Jean on your immediate TBR, then here's a little public service announcement for you: PLEASE READ THIS ABSOLUTELY FANTABULOUS BOOK RIGHT NOW!
Here Are All the Reasons You Need to Read ‘Tweet Cute’ Right Now
'Tweet Cute' by Emma Lord is a delightfully sweet and utterly cheesy (both figuratively and literally) romance that will fill you up like a home-cooked meal. And here are all the reasons I need you to read it.
A Heart So Fierce and Broken by Brigid Kemmerer: A Book Review
Do you remember that scene in Anne of Green Gables where Anne accidentally serves her friend, Diana, currant wine instead of raspberry cordial? Well, reading A Heart So Fierce and Broken by Brigid Kemmerer was kind of like that. I was expecting one thing, and what I got was vastly, intoxicatingly different.
The Downstairs Girl by Stacey Lee: A Book Review
What makes you go all moon-eyed and starstruck in love with a book? For me, it's the characters. And boy oh boy, does The Downstairs Girl by Stacey Lee have some amazing ones! Exhibit A: Jo Kuan. By day, she's a lady's maid to one of the richest, most stuck-up debutants in all of Atlanta. By night, she's Miss Sweetie, the anonymous author of the local newspaper's advice column. But no matter the time, Jo is full of spunk, sparkling wit, and undying courage. Believe you me: you won't want to miss this timely story chronicling her patriarchy-toppling, stereotype-smashing adventures!